1.
Winthrop, J. City upon a Hill. (1630).
2.
Hixson, W. L. The myth of American diplomacy: national identity and U.S. foreign policy. (Yale University Press).
3.
Rodgers, D. T. Exceptionalism. in Imagined histories: American historians interpret the past 21–40 (Princeton Universaity Press, 1998).
4.
Adas, M. From Settler Colony to Global Hegemon: Integrating the Exceptionalist Narrative of the American Experience into World History. The American Historical Review 106, (2001).
5.
Paul A. Kramer. Power and Connection: Imperial Histories of the United States in the World. American Historical Review 116, 1348–1392 (2011).
6.
Immerwahr, D. The Greater United States: Territory and Empire in U.S. History. Diplomatic History 40, 373–391 (2016).
7.
Kramer P.A. How not to write the history of U.S. empire. Diplomatic History 42, (2018).
8.
Immerwahr, D. How to hide an empire: a short history of the greater United States. (The Bodley Head, an imprint of Vintage, 2019).
9.
From Settler Colony to Global Hegemon: Integrating the Exceptionalist Narrative of the American Experience into World History. The American Historical Review (2001) doi:10.1086/ahr/106.5.1692.
10.
Bender, T. A nation among nations: America’s place in world history. (Hill and Wang, 2006).
11.
Maier, C. S. Among empires: American ascendancy and its predecessors. (Harvard University Press, 2007).
12.
dawsonera & American Historical Association. Manela, Erez, ‘The United States in the World’, pp. 201-220. in American history now (eds. Foner, E. & McGirr, L.) (Temple University Press, 2011).
13.
Wolfe, P. History and Imperialism: A Century of Theory, from Marx to Postcolonialism. The American Historical Review 102, (1997).
14.
Cherokee Nation. Memorial Letter from the Cherokee Nation to Congress. Niles’ Weekly Register 38, 53–54 (1829).
15.
President Jackson’s Message to Congress, passage on Indian Removal. Records of the United States Senate, 1789-1990 vol. Record Group 46 (1830).
16.
Banner, S. How the Indians lost their land: law and power on the frontier. (The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2005).
17.
‘They made us many promises’: the American Indian experience, 1524 to the present. (Harlan Davidson, 2002).
18.
Wolfe, P. Land, Labor, and Difference: Elementary Structures of Race. The American Historical Review 106, (2001).
19.
Hämäläinen, P. & William P. Clements Center for Southwest Studies. The Comanche empire. (Yale University Press, 2008).
20.
Pekka Hämäläinen and Samuel Truett. On Borderlands. The Journal of American History 98, 338–361 (2011).
21.
Veracini, L. ‘Settler Colonialism’: Career of a Concept. The Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 41, 313–333 (2013).
22.
White, R. The Winning of the West: The Expansion of the Western Sioux in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries. The Journal of American History 65, (1978).
23.
From Borderlands to Borders: Empires, Nation-States, and the Peoples in Between in North American History. The American Historical Review (1999) doi:10.1086/ahr/104.3.814.
24.
Belich, J. Replenishing the earth: the settler revolution and the rise of the Anglo-world, 1783-1939. (Oxford University Press, 2009).
25.
Chaplin, J. E. Expansion and Exceptionalism in Early American History. Journal of American History 89, (2003).
26.
Elkins, C. & Pedersen, S. Settler colonialism in the twentieth century: projects, practices, legacies. (Routledge, 2005).
27.
Ford, L. Settler sovereignty: jurisdiction and indigenous people in America and Australia, 1788-1836. vol. 166 (Harvard University Press, 2011).
28.
Hixson, W. L. & dawsonera. American settler colonialism: a history. (Palgrave Macmillan, 2013).
29.
Madsden, D. L. Dispossession: Native American Responses to the Ideology of Exceptionalism. in American exceptionalism 41–69 (Edinburgh University Press, 1998).
30.
Sheehan, B. W. Seeds of extinction: Jeffersonian philanthropy and the American Indian. (Published for the Institute of Early American History and Culture at Williamsburg, Va., by the University of North Carolina Press, 1973).
31.
Perdue, T. & Green, M. D. The Cherokee Nation and the Trail of Tears. (Penguin Books, 2007).
32.
Thomas Jefferson to James Madison - Thomas Jefferson | Exhibitions - Library of Congress. (1809).
33.
Northwest Ordinance. (1789).
34.
O’Sullivan, J. The Great Nation of Futurity. US Democratic Review 23,.
35.
O’Sullivan, J. Annexation. US Democratic Review 17,.
36.
Go, J. Patterns of Empire: The British and American Empires, 1688 to the Present. (Cambridge University Press, 2011).
37.
Johnson, W. Introduction and chapter 11, in River of dark dreams: slavery and empire in the cotton kingdom. in River of dark dreams: slavery and empire in the cotton kingdom (The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2013).
38.
Beckert, S. Empire of cotton: a global history. (Vintage Books, 2015).
39.
Karp, M. & dawsonera. This vast southern empire: slaveholders at the helm of American foreign policy. (Harvard University Press, 2016).
40.
Hietala, T. R. Manifest design: American exceptionalism and empire. vol. Cornell paperbacks (Cornell University Press).
41.
Stephanson, A. Manifest destiny: American expansionism and the empire of right. vol. A critical issue (Hill and Wang, 1996).
42.
Baptist, E. E. The half has never been told: slavery and the making of American capitalism. (Basic Books, 2014).
43.
Sexton, J. The Monroe Doctrine: empire and nation in nineteenth-century America. (Hill and Wang, 2011).
44.
Torget, A. J. Seeds of empire: cotton, slavery, and the transformation of the Texas borderlands, 1800-1850. (The University of North Carolina Press, 2015).
45.
Slavery’s capitalism: a new history of American economic development. (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2016).
46.
Turner, F. J. Chapter 1. in The Frontier in American History (Holt, 1920).
47.
Roosevelt, T. Chapter IV. in The Rough riders (Charles Scribners, 1899).
48.
Transcript of Theodore Roosevelt’s Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine (1905). (1905).
49.
Hoganson, K. L. Cuba and the Restoration of American Chivalry. in Fighting for American manhood: how gender politics provoked the Spanish-American and Philippine-American wars vol. Yale historical publications 43–67 (Yale University Press, 1998).
50.
Kaplan, A. ‘Left Alone with America’: The Absence of Empire in the Study of American Culture. in Cultures of United States imperialism (eds. Kaplan, A. & Pease, D. E.) vol. New Americanists 3–21 (Duke University Press, 1993).
51.
Bederman, G. & dawsonera. Manliness and civilization: a cultural history of gender and race in the United States 1880-1917. (University of Chicago Press, 1995).
52.
Kaplan, A. Black and Blue on San Juan Hill. in The anarchy of empire in the making of U.S. culture vol. Convergences : inventories of the past 121–145 (Harvard University Press, 2002).
53.
Pérez, L. A. The war of 1898: the United States and Cuba in history and historiography. (University of North Carolina Press, 1998).
54.
Thompson, L. Imperial archipelago: representation and rule in the insular territories under U.S. dominion after 1898. (University of Hawai’i Press, 2016).
55.
Bender, D. E. American abyss: savagery and civilization in the age of industry. (Cornell University Press, 2013).
56.
Carter, J. B. The heart of whiteness: normal sexuality and race in America, 1880-1940. (Duke University Press, 2007).
57.
Dyer, T. G. Theodore Roosevelt and the idea of race. (Louisiana State University Press, 1980).
58.
Fry, J. A. Imperialism, American Style, 1890-1916. in American foreign relations reconsidered, 1890 - 1993 52–70 (Routledge, 1994).
59.
Gerstle, G. American crucible: race and nation in the twentieth century. (Princeton University Press, 2017).
60.
Kimmel, M. S. Manhood in America: a cultural history. (Oxford University Press, 2012).
61.
Lake, M. & Reynolds, H. Theodore Roosevelt’s Re-Assertion of Racial Vigour. in Drawing the global colour line: white men’s countries and the international challenge of racial equality vol. Critical perspectives on empire 95–113 (Cambridge University Press, 2011).
62.
Rotundo, E. A. American manhood: transformations in masculinity from the Revolution to the modern era. (Basic Books, 1993).
63.
Stoler, A. L. Cultivating Bourgeois Bodies and Racial Selves. in Cultures of empire: colonzers in Britain and the Empire in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries : a reader 87–119 (Manchester University Press, 2000).
64.
Message of the President on the Panama Canal communicated to the two Houses of Congress.
65.
Colby, J. M. Corporate Colonialism, 1904-1912. in The business of empire: United Fruit, race, and U.S. expansion in Central America vol. The United States in the world 79–117 (Cornell University Press, 2013).
66.
Greene, J. The Wages of Empire: Capitalism, Expansionism, and Working-Class Formation. in Making the empire work: labor and United States imperialism (eds. Bender, D. E. & Lipman, J. K.) vol. Culture, labor, history series 35–58 (New York University Press, 2015).
67.
Herring, G. C. Chapter 9. in From colony to superpower: U.S. foreign relations since 1776 vol. The Oxford history of the United States (Oxford University Press, 2008).
68.
Hixson, W. L. The myth of American diplomacy: national identity and U.S. foreign policy. (Yale University Press, 2008).
69.
Ninkovich, F. A. The United States and imperialism. vol. Problems in American history (Blackwell Publishing, 2001).
70.
Greene, J. The canal builders: making America’s empire at the Panama Canal. (Penguin Press, 2009).
71.
Stoler, A. L. & Cooper, F. Between Metropole and Colony: Rethinking a Research Agenda. in Tensions of empire: colonial cultures in a bourgeois world 1–56 (University of California Press, 1997). doi:10.1525/california/9780520205406.003.0001.
72.
Roediger, D. R. & Esch, E. D. The production of difference: race and the management of labor in U.S. history. (Oxford University Press, 2012).
73.
Adas, M. Dominance by design: technological imperatives and America’s civilizing mission. (Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2006).
74.
Anderson, W. Colonial pathologies: American tropical medicine, race, and hygiene in the Philippines. (Duke University Press, 2006).
75.
Ayala, C. J. American sugar kingdom: the plantation economy of the Spanish Caribbean, 1898-1934. (University of North Carolina Press).
76.
Espinosa, M. & dawsonera. Epidemic invasions: yellow fever and the limits of Cuban independence, 1878-1930. (University of Chicago Press, 2009).
77.
Le Grand, C. C. Living in Macondo: Economy and Culture in a United Fruit Company Banana Enclave in Colombia. in Close encounters of empire: writing the cultural history of U.S.-Latin American relations vol. American encounters/global interactions 333–368 (Duke University Press, 1998).
78.
Fink, L. & ProQuest (Firm). The long Gilded Age: American capitalism and the lessons of a new world order. (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2015).
79.
Merleaux, A. Sugar and Civilization. (University of North Carolina Press, 2015). doi:10.5149/northcarolina/9781469622514.001.0001.
80.
Missal, A. Seaway to the future: American social visions and the construction of the Panama Canal. (University of Wisconsin Press, 2009).
81.
Salman, M. "The Prison That Makes Men Free”: The Iwahig Penal Colony and the Simulacra of the American State in the Philippines. in Colonial crucible: empire in the making of the modern American state (eds. McCoy, A. W. & Scarano, F. A.) 116–128 (University of Wisconsin Press, 2009).
82.
Tucker, R. P. Insatiable appetite: the United States and the ecological degradation of the tropical world. (University of California Press).
83.
Bois, W. E. B. D. & Wilson, W. My Impressions of Woodrow Wilson. The Journal of Negro History 58, (1973).
84.
Erez, M. Laying India’s Ailments before Dr. Wilson. in The Wilsonian Moment 77–97 (Oxford University Press, USA, 2007).
85.
Rosenberg, E. S. World War I, Wilsonianism, and Challenges to U.S. Empire. Diplomatic History 38, 852–863 (2014).
86.
Go, J. Anti-imperialism in the U.S. Territories after 1898. in Empire’s twin: U.S. anti-imperialism from the founding era to the age of terrorism (eds. Tyrrell, I. R. & Sexton, J.) vol. United States in the world 79–96 (Cornell University Press, 2015).
87.
Rosenberg, E. S. Ordering Others: U.S. Financial Advisers in the Early Twentieth Century. in Haunted by empire: geographies of intimacy in North American history vol. American encounters/global interactions 426–426 (Duke University Press, 2006).
88.
Ninkovich, F. The Great War: Wilsonianism as Crisis Internationalism. in The Wilsonian century: U.S. foreign policy since 1900 48–77 (University of Chicago Press, 1999).
89.
Herring, G. C. Chapter 10. in From colony to superpower: U.S. foreign relations since 1776 vol. The Oxford history of the United States (Oxford University Press, 2008).
90.
Lake, M. & Reynolds, H. Drawing the global colour line: white men’s countries and the international challenge of racial equality. (Cambridge University Press, 2011).
91.
Goebel, M. Anti-Imperial Metropolis: Interwar Paris and the Seeds of Third World Nationalism. (Cambridge University Press, 2015).
92.
Hudson, P. J. & ProQuest (Firm). Bankers and empire: how Wall Street colonized the Caribbean. (The University of Chicago Press, 2017).
93.
Manela, E. The Wilsonian moment: self-determination and the international origins of anticolonial nationalism. (Oxford University Press, 2007).
94.
Nichols, C. M. & ProQuest (Firm). Promise and peril: America at the dawn of a global age. (Harvard University Press, 2011).
95.
Renda, M. A. & ProQuest (Firm). Taking Haiti: military occupation and the culture of U.S. imperialism, 1915-1940. (University of North Carolina Press, 2001).
96.
Rosenberg, E. S. & dawsonera. Financial missionaries to the world: the politics and culture of dollar diplomacy, 1900-1930. (Duke University Press, 2003).
97.
Tillman, E. D. Dollar diplomacy by force: nation-building and resistance in the Dominican Republic. (The University of North Carolina Press, 2016).
98.
Veeser, C. A world safe for capitalism: dollar diplomacy and America’s rise to global power. (Columbia University Press).
99.
NATO - Official text: ‘The Atlantic Charter’ - Declaration of Principles issued by the President of the United States and the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, 14-Aug.-1941.
100.
Transcript of Truman Doctrine (1947).
101.
Luce, H. R. The American Century. Diplomatic History 23, 159–171 (1999).
102.
Hartz, L. The Coming of Age of America. American Political Science Review 51, 474–483 (1957).
103.
Dudziak, M. L. Josephine Baker, Racial Protest, and the Cold War. The Journal of American History 81, (1994).
104.
Nolan, M. Chapter 8 Culture Wars, in The Transatlantic Century: Europe and America, 1890–2010. in The Transatlantic Century: Europe and America, 1890–2010 vol. New Approaches to European History (Cambridge University Press, 2012).
105.
De Grazia, V. The consumer-citizen: how european traded rights for goods. in Irresistible empire: America’s advance through twentieth-century Europe 336–375 (Belknap Press, 2005).
106.
Kuisel, R. F. Chapter 3. in Seducing the French: the dilemma of Americanization (University of California Press, 1993).
107.
Lundestad, G. ‘Empire by Invitation’ in the American Century. Diplomatic History 23, 189–217 (1999).
108.
Nye, J. S. Soft Power. Foreign Policy (1990) doi:10.2307/1148580.
109.
Borstelmann, T. The Cold War and the color line: American race relations in the global arena. (Harvard University Press, 2001).
110.
Cohen, L. A consumers’ republic: the politics of mass consumption in postwar America. (Vintage Books, 2004).
111.
Daunton, M. J., Hilton, M. J., & Material Politics : States, Consumers, and Political Cultures (Colloquium). The politics of consumption: material culture and citizenship in Europe and America. (Berg, 2001).
112.
Von Eschen, P. M. Race against empire: Black Americans and anticolonialism, 1937-1957. (Cornell University Press, 1997).
113.
Davenport, L. E. Jazz Diplomacy. (University Press of Mississippi, 2009). doi:10.14325/mississippi/9781604732689.001.0001.
114.
Dudziak, M. L. & dawsonera. Cold War civil rights: race and the image of American democracy. (Princeton University Press, 2011).
115.
Von Eschen, P. M. & dawsonera. Satchmo blows up the world: jazz ambassadors play the Cold War. (Harvard University Press, 2006).
116.
De Grazia, V. Irresistible empire: America’s advance through twentieth-century Europe. (Belknap Press, 2005).
117.
McNamara, R. S. & VanDeMark, B. In retrospect: the tragedy and lessons of Vietnam. (Vintage Books, 1996).
118.
Cleaver, E. Soul on ice: [selected essays]. vol. Cape editions (Cape, 1969).
119.
Bloom, A. & Breines, W. ‘Takin’ it to the streets’: a sixties reader. (Oxford University Press, 2011).
120.
Lawrence, M. A. & Logevall, F. The first Vietnam War: colonial conflict and Cold War crisis. (Harvard, 2007).
121.
Lucks, D. S. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s Riverside Speech and Cold War Civil Rights. Peace & Change 40, 395–422 (2015).
122.
Hunt, M. H., Levine, S. I., & ProQuest (Firm). Arc of empire: America’s wars in Asia from the Philippines to Vietnam. (University of North Carolina Press, 2012).
123.
Malloy, S. L. Uptight in Babylon: Eldridge Cleaver’s Cold War,. Diplomatic History 37, 538–571 (2013).
124.
Cohen, W. I. Chapter 6. in The new Cambridge history of American foreign relations: Volume 4: Challenges to the American primacy, 1945 to the present (Cambridge University Press, 2015).
125.
Herring, G. C. From colony to superpower: U.S. foreign relations since 1776. (Oxford University Press, 2008).
126.
Lucks, D. S. Selma to Saigon: the civil rights movement and the Vietnam War. (University Press of Kentucky, 2014).
127.
Logevall, F. Embers of war: the fall of an empire and the making of America’s Vietnam. (Random House, 2012).
128.
Daddis, G. A. & dawsonera. Westmoreland’s war: reassessing American strategy in Vietnam. (Oxford University Press, 2014).
129.
Plummer, B. G. In Search of Power: African Americans in the Era of Decolonization, 1956–1974. (Cambridge University Press, 2013).
130.
Gilbert, M. J. Why the North won the Vietnam War. (Palgrave, 2002).
131.
Grant, N. Winning our freedoms together: African Americans and apartheid, 1945-1960. vol. Justice, power, and politics (University of North Carolina Press, 2017).
132.
Malloy, S. L. Out of Oakland: Black Panther Party internationalism during the Cold War. (Cornell University Press, 2018).
133.
Stewart, G. Vietnam’s lost revolution: Ngô Đình Diệm’s failure to build an independent nation, 1955-1963. (Cambridge University Press, 2017).
134.
Evans, R. & ProQuest (Firm). From Toussaint to Tupac: the Black international since the age of revolution. (University of North Carolina Press, 2009).
135.
Young, M. B. The Vietnam wars, 1945-1990. (Harper Perennial, 1991).
136.
Young, M. B. & Buzzanco, R. A companion to the Vietnam War. (Blackwell, 2002).
137.
Bringing them Home Report (1997) | Australian Human Rights Commission.
138.
Jacobs, M. D. Designing Indigenous Child Removal Policies. in White mother to a dark race: settler colonialism, maternalism, and the removal of indigenous children in the American West and Australia, 1880-1940 25–86 (University of Nebraska Press, 2009).
139.
Ellinghaus, K. Biological Absorption and Genocide: A Comparison of Indigenous Assimilation Policies in the United States and Australia. Genocide Studies and Prevention 4, 59–79 (2009).
140.
dawsonera. Anderson, Warwick, ‘States of Hygiene: Race “Improvement” and Biomedical Citizenship in Australia and the Colonial Philippines’, pp. 94-115. in Haunted by empire: geographies of intimacy in North American history (ed. Stoler, A. L.) (Duke University Press, 2006).
141.
Haskins, V. K. Matrons and maids: regulating Indian domestic service in Tucson, 1914--1934. (University of Arizona Press).
142.
Hoxie, F. E. A final promise: the campaign to assimilate the Indians, 1880-1920. (Cambridge University Press, 1989).
143.
Jacobs, M. D. White mother to a dark race: settler colonialism, maternalism, and the removal of indigenous children in the American West and Australia, 1880-1940. (University of Nebraska Press, 2009).
144.
McCoy, A. W. The Philippines: Independence without Decolonisation. in Asia, the winning of independence: the Philippines, India, Indonesia, Vietnam, Malaya vol. Macmillan international college editions 80–118 (Macmillan, 1981).
145.
ProQuest (Firm). Indigenous women and work: from labor to activism. (University of Illinois Press, 2012).
146.
Lutz, C. Bases of Empire: the Global Struggle Against U.S. Military Posts. (Pluto Press, 2008).
147.
Bush, George H. W., "Address before a Joint Session of Congress”, September 11, 1990. https://bush41library.tamu.edu/archives/public-papers/2217.
148.
National Security Strategy, 2002. https://history.defense.gov/Portals/70/Documents/nss/nss2002.pdf?ver=2014-06-25-121337-027.
149.
Ferguson, N., O’Brien, P. K. & Clesse, A. Hegemony or Empire? Foreign Affairs 82, (2003).
150.
Hunt, M. H. Hegemony in Question. in The American ascendancy: how the United States gained and wielded global dominance vol. H. Eugene and Lillian Youngs Lehman series 308–324 (University of North Carolina Press, 2007).
151.
Fukuyama, F. The End of History? The National Interest.
152.
Immerman, R. H. Empire for liberty: a history of American imperialism from Benjamin Franklin to Paul Wolfowitz. (Princeton University Press, 2010).
153.
Huntington, S. P. The Clash of Civilizations? Foreign Affairs 72, (1993).
154.
Whither the "City Upon a Hill”? Donald Trump, America First, and American Exceptionalism - Texas National Security Review. https://tnsr.org/2019/12/whither-the-city-upon-a-hill-donald-trump-america-first-and-american-exceptionalism/.
155.
Cobbs Hoffman, E. American umpire. (Harvard University Press, 2013).
156.
YOUNG, M. B. "I was thinking, as I often do these days, of war”:The United States in the Twenty-First Century. Diplomatic History 36, 1–15 (2012).
157.
Bacevich, A. J. ‘Not so Different after All’. in The short American century: a postmortem (ed. Bacevich, A. J.) (Harvard University Press, 2012).
158.
Rupert, M. ‘Hegemony and the Far-Right: Policing Dissent in Imperial America’. in The longue durée of the far-right: an international historical sociology (eds. Saull, R., Anievas, A., Davidson, N. & Fabry, A.) vol. Routledge studies in modern history 193–216 (Routledge, 2015).
159.
Chatterjee, P. Empire after Globalisation. in The new imperial histories reader vol. Routledge readers in history 448–460 (Routledge, 2010).
160.
Amy Kaplan. Where Is Guantánamo? American Quarterly 57, 831–858 (2005).
161.
Stephanson, A. ‘A Most Interesting Empire’. in The new American empire 253–276 (New Press, 2005).
162.
Porter, B. We Don’t Do Empire: American Imperialism after 9/11. in Empire and superempire: Britain, America and the world 93–133 (Yale University Press, 2006).
163.
Young, M. B. The Age of Global Power. in Rethinking American history in a global age 274–294 (University of California Press, 2002). doi:10.1525/california/9780520230576.003.0012.
164.
Singh, N. P. & ProQuest (Firm). Race and America’s long war. (University of California Press, 2017).
165.
Schrader, S. Badges without borders: how global counterinsurgency transformed American policing. vol. 56 (University of California Press, 2019).
166.
Kristin L. Hoganson & Jay Sexton. Crossing empires: taking U.S. history into transimperial terrain. (Duke University Press Books, 2020).
167.
McCoy, A. W. & Scarano, F. A. The colonial crucible: empire in the making of the modern American state. (University of Wisconsin Press).
168.
Foner, E. Give me liberty!: an American history. (W W Norton, 2017).
169.
Major problems in American history: documents and essays. Vol II: Since 1865. vol. Major problems in American history series (Wadsworth Cengage Learning, 2012).
170.
Major problems in American history since 1945: documents and essays. vol. Major problems in American history series (Cengage Learning, 2014).
171.
Holt, T. C. & Brown, E. B. Major problems in African-American history: documents and essays. Vol II. vol. Major problems in American history series (Houghton Mifflin, 2000).
172.
Major problems in American foreign relations: documents and essays Vol. II. vol. Major problems in American history series (Wadsworth Cengage Learning, 2010).
173.
McMahon, R. J. Major problems in the history of the Vietnam War: documents and essays. vol. Major problems in American history series (D.C. Heath, 1995).
174.
Major problems in American Indian history: documents and essays. (Cengage Learning, 2015).
175.
Milner, C. A. Major problems in the history of the American West: documents and essays. (D.C. Heath, 1989).
176.
Hunt, M. H. The world transformed: 1945 to the present. (Oxford University Press, 2016).
177.
Osterhammel, J. Colonialism: a theoretical overview. (Markus Wiener, 2005).
178.
Stoler, A. L. On degrees of imperial sovereignty. vol. vol.18, no.1 (Duke University Press, 2006).
179.
Hunt, M. H. The world transformed: 1945 to the present. (Oxford University Press, 2016).
180.
Cohen, W. I. The new Cambridge history of American foreign relations: Volume 4: Challenges to the American primacy, 1945 to the present. (Cambridge University Press, 2015).
181.
Cohen, W. I. The new Cambridge history of American foreign relations: Volume 4: Challenges to American primacy, 1945 to the present. (Cambridge University Press, 2013).
182.
Iriye, A. The new Cambridge history of American foreign relations: Volume 3: the globalizing of america 1913-1945. (Cambridge University Press, 2013).
183.
Iriye, A. The globalizing of America, 1913-1945. vol. v. 3 (University of Cambridge).
184.
Immerwahr, D. How to hide an empire: a short history of the greater United States. (The Bodley Head, an imprint of Vintage, 2019).
185.
Hopkins, A. G. American empire: a global history. (Princeton University Press, 2018).
186.
Hopkins, A. G. American empire: a global history. (Princeton University Press, 2018).
187.
Herring, G. C. & dawsonera. The American century and beyond: U.S. foreign relations, 1893-2015. (Oxford University Press, 2017).
188.
Herring, G. C. From colony to superpower: U.S. foreign relations since 1776. (Oxford University Press, 2008).
189.
Grandin, G. The end of the myth: from the frontier to the wall in the mind of America. (Metropolitan Books, 2019).